EP0253525A1 - Heat strengthened glass - Google Patents

Heat strengthened glass Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0253525A1
EP0253525A1 EP87305572A EP87305572A EP0253525A1 EP 0253525 A1 EP0253525 A1 EP 0253525A1 EP 87305572 A EP87305572 A EP 87305572A EP 87305572 A EP87305572 A EP 87305572A EP 0253525 A1 EP0253525 A1 EP 0253525A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
glass
discontinuous
roller
furnace
bearing
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
EP87305572A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP0253525B1 (en
Inventor
Peter Ward
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Pilkington Group Ltd
Original Assignee
Pilkington PLC
Pilkington Brothers Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Pilkington PLC, Pilkington Brothers Ltd filed Critical Pilkington PLC
Priority to AT87305572T priority Critical patent/ATE52485T1/en
Publication of EP0253525A1 publication Critical patent/EP0253525A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0253525B1 publication Critical patent/EP0253525B1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B27/00Tempering or quenching glass products
    • C03B27/04Tempering or quenching glass products using gas
    • C03B27/0413Stresses, e.g. patterns, values or formulae for flat or bent glass sheets
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B27/00Tempering or quenching glass products
    • C03B27/04Tempering or quenching glass products using gas
    • C03B27/044Tempering or quenching glass products using gas for flat or bent glass sheets being in a horizontal position
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B35/00Transporting of glass products during their manufacture, e.g. hot glass lenses, prisms
    • C03B35/14Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands
    • C03B35/16Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands by roller conveyors
    • C03B35/18Construction of the conveyor rollers ; Materials, coatings or coverings thereof
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B35/00Transporting of glass products during their manufacture, e.g. hot glass lenses, prisms
    • C03B35/14Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands
    • C03B35/16Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands by roller conveyors
    • C03B35/18Construction of the conveyor rollers ; Materials, coatings or coverings thereof
    • C03B35/181Materials, coatings, loose coverings or sleeves thereof
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B35/00Transporting of glass products during their manufacture, e.g. hot glass lenses, prisms
    • C03B35/14Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands
    • C03B35/16Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands by roller conveyors
    • C03B35/18Construction of the conveyor rollers ; Materials, coatings or coverings thereof
    • C03B35/185Construction of the conveyor rollers ; Materials, coatings or coverings thereof having a discontinuous surface for contacting the sheets or ribbons other than cloth or fabric, e.g. having protrusions or depressions, spirally wound cable, projecting discs or tires
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B35/00Transporting of glass products during their manufacture, e.g. hot glass lenses, prisms
    • C03B35/14Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands
    • C03B35/16Transporting hot glass sheets or ribbons, e.g. by heat-resistant conveyor belts or bands by roller conveyors
    • C03B35/18Construction of the conveyor rollers ; Materials, coatings or coverings thereof
    • C03B35/189Disc rollers
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03BMANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
    • C03B40/00Preventing adhesion between glass and glass or between glass and the means used to shape it, hold it or support it
    • C03B40/005Fabrics, felts or loose covers

Definitions

  • This invention relates to heat strengthened glass and in particular to a method and apparatus for manufacturing heat strengthened glass panels for incorporation in a fully-glazed facade of a building.
  • Such glass panels should be stronger than annealed glass so as to be capable of resisting stresses to which the panels may be subjected during glazing, and due to wind load when in situ .
  • the panels should not be heat treated to a degree such that thermally induced stresses in the glass are at a level which could cause dicing of the glass upon inadvertent fracture.
  • heat strengthened glass which is defined in United States Federal Specification DD-G-l403D, dated August l5, l972 as glass having a surface compression of not less than 3,500 p.s.i. (24 MN/m2) or greater than l0,000 p.s.i. (69 MN/m2) or an edge compression of less than 5,500 p.s.i. (38 MN/m2).
  • the permissible upper limit of stress is dependent on the thickness of the glass and it has been found that the thicker the glass the lower is the value of the stresses in the glass which may cause dicing when the glass is fractured.
  • thicker heat strengthened glass for example about l2mm thick, may have compression stresses somewhat lower than those indicated above, while thinner heat strengthened glasses may have compression stresses somewhat higher than those indicated above.
  • rollers which do not contact the lower surface of the glass along the whole length of the rollers.
  • rollers which have been employed are "donut" rollers having a spaced series of ceramic tyres which provide the roller support, or rollers which are wound helically with thermally insulating tape of refractory fibre material. Both the tyres and the helical windings provide bearing surfaces which are continuous across the region of contact between the roller and the glass.
  • the level of stress to be induced in the glass predicates a low rate of heat exchange with the glass surfaces during cooling.
  • the thicker the glass, the lower the rate of cooling, and the heat transfer from the lower glass surface by conduction through the roller contact is then at a rate commensurate with heat transfer from the glass due to the overall cooling of exposed parts of the glass surface between the rollers.
  • the heat transfer between the glass and the supporting roller surfaces becomes significant and leads to patterns of iridescence in the glass.
  • Patterns of iridescence induced in the glass which are visible in polarised light, have been found to include prominent continuous band or trellis-like features which would be visible to the eye when the panels are glazed in a building. Such patterns are unacceptable, and are emphasised when the glass has been coated after its heat treatment, because the presence of a light reflecting coating on the glass can enhance the obtrusive nature of such iridescent patterns.
  • a method of producing heat strengthened glass in which the glass is heated to a temperature above its strain point and is then cooled while horizontally supported, characterised by providing discontinuous support for the glass as it is cooled by intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass, whereby any pattern of iridescence resulting from heat transfer between the lower glass surface and the support is free of prominent continuous features.
  • the glass is supported on horizontal rollers having discontinuous bearing surfaces which provide said intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • the discontinuous bearing surfaces are of thermally insulating material.
  • the method of the invention may include applying a light reflecting coating to the glass before or after heat strengthening.
  • the invention also comprehends a glass treatment furnace for producing heat strengthened glass, having horizontal glass-supporting rollers and cooling-flow supply means in the vicinity of those rollers, characterised in that the bearing surface of each roller comprises discontinuous bearing elements which provide intermittent regional support contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • the discontinuous bearing elements have bearing surfaces of thermally insulating material.
  • the discontinuous bearing elements may be arranged spirally around the roller.
  • discontinuous bearing elements may be arranged randomly on the roller.
  • the bearing elements are parts of castellated tyres.
  • the castellated tyres may be angularly staggered around the roller.
  • Each bearing element may have a maximum linear dimension of 80mm.
  • the cooling station of a glass treatment furnace for producing heat strengthened glass panels is illustrated diagrammatically in Figure l.
  • a glass sheet l is heated to a temperature above its strain point, for example about 600°C while supported on horizontal rollers and then the hot glass sheet is transported on horizontal rollers to a cooling station shown in Figure l.
  • the hot sheet l is supported on horizontal rollers 2 which are, for example, spaced about l20mm apart, and the glass is cooled by air flows 3 and 4 which are directed from upper and lower cooling-air supply hoods 5 and 6 mounted in the vicinity of the rollers 2.
  • the air flows 3 and 4 may be directed towards the upper and lower surfaces of the glass sheet l by nozzles or through perforated plates which form a part of the supply means.
  • the hot glass sheet l is indexed to and fro in known manner through the air flows for a period of time, for example 4 minutes for l0mm glass, sufficient to induce the required stresses in the glass. After the glass has been cooled below its strain point it is cooled by higher pressure air flows for a further period for example 5 minutes, sufficient to reduce its temperature to handling temperature.
  • the horizontal rollers 2 which support the glass while it is cooled are designed, according to the invention, to provide discontinuous support for the glass by intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • the bearing surface of each of the rollers 2 comprises discontinuous bearing elements which provide intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • each of the supporting rollers 2 is illustrated in Figure 2.
  • the main body 7 of the roller is a conventional mild steel roller of cylindrical form, and discontinuous bearing elements 8 are adhered to the roller surface.
  • the bearing elements 8 are arranged spirally around the roller 7, at spaced intervals along one or more spiral paths.
  • This supporting roller was produced by winding a glass fibre tape approximately 25mm wide spirally around the roller 7, using adhesive.
  • the spiral winding was then severed at periodic locations and severed portions removed so as to leave the discontinuous array of bearing elements 8 each approximately 25mm ⁇ 30mm and having a linear dimension of about 40mm.
  • the maximum linear dimension of the bearing elements may be about 80mm.
  • the bearing elements are less than 50mm long.
  • the elements 8 provide intermittent regional support contact with the lower surface of the glass sheet.
  • a tape of refractory fibre sold under the trade mark "Kevlar" may be used in place of the glass fibre tape. The tape provides a discontinuous thermally insulating bearing surface on the roller.
  • This roller form ensures that conductive heat transfer away from every supported region of the lower glass surface, during the indexing of the glass sheet l on the rollers 2, occurs only over separated regions of the glass surface during cooling of that surface by the upward cooling air flows 4.
  • the pattern of iridescence which could be observed in the heat strengthened glass panel was of a distributed appearance without prominent continuous features, for example lines, such as would induce the eye to observe the existence of that pattern.
  • the appearance of the processed heat strengthened glass panel was acceptable even when the glass sheet had been coated with a light reflecting coating, for example of sputtered metal.
  • the light reflecting coating could be applied to the glass before heat strengthening if the coating was sufficiently durable to withstand the heat strengthening process, or after heat strengthening.
  • a glass sheet l0mm thick and l200mm square was processed by this method using flows of cooling air at a pressure of about 2.5Pa (.0l inch water gauge) for 4 minutes. The sheet was then subjected to higher pressure cooling for about 5 minutes.
  • the resulting heat strengthened glass sheets had an edge compression greater than 40 MPa and a centre tension in the range 20 MPa to 25 MPa. This sheet did not dice on fracture, and if fractured in situ in a building would break into pieces sufficiently large to be retained by a glazing frame in which it was clamped.
  • the increased strength of the glass sheet provided effective resistance to wind loading.
  • Thinner sheets of heat processed glass have somewhat higher stresses.
  • samples of 6mm glass produced by the method of the invention had a surface edge compression of about 55 MPa and a centre tension of 25 MPa to 30 MPa.
  • Sample glass sheets 4 mm thick had a surface/edge compression of about 55 MPa and a centre tension of about 25 MPa, although dicing fracture does not occur until the centre tension is about 43 MPa.
  • the discontinuous bearing elements 8 of Figure 2 may be arranged in a random distribution on the roller 7 in a manner which does not detract from effective support contact for indexing the glass sheet, between the cooling air flows 3 and 4.
  • each roller 2 is with a moulded ceramic sleeve having a moulded distribution of raised bearing elements which intermittently contact the lower surface of the glass sheet as it is indexed to and fro.
  • FIG. 3 is an adaptation according to the invention of a convention "donut" roller having a central spindle 9 and a spaced series of wheels l0 with tyres ll of reinforced ceramic fibre in a matrix.
  • Each tyre has a castellated bearing surface, providing three bearing elements l2, each providing a bearing land about 25mm long, on each tyre, separated by machined depressions l3.
  • the bearing lands l2 need not be equiangularly spaced around the tyres, and the castellated tyres ll are angularly staggered in random manner around the spindle 9, as indicated in Figure 4, so that the bearing lands l2 of all the tyres ll of the roller together provide random, discontinuous support for the glass sheet with intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • Each of these horizontal roller constructions according to the invention provides bearing surfaces which are not continuous in any direction over the region of contact between the glass surface and the roller. This ensures that overall uniform heat transfer from the lower surface of the glass is disturbed only over discrete separated regions, thereby producing as a new product heat strengthened glass panels having a visually unobtrusive pattern of iridescence which is acceptable in heat strengthened glass panels for glazing in a facade of a building.

Abstract

A method of producing heat strengthened glass (l) in which the glass (l) is heated to a temperature above its strain point and is then cooled while horizontally supported. Discontinuous support (2) is provided for the glass (l) as it is cooled by intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass (l), whereby any pattern of iridescence resulting from heat transfer between the lower glass surface and the support (2) is free of prominent continuous features. A glass treatment furnace for producing heat strengthened glass (l), has horizontal glass-supporting rollers (2) and cooling-flow supply means (5,6) in the vicinity of those rollers (2), the bearing surface of each roller (2) comprising discontinuous bearing elements (8) which provide intermittent regional support contact with the lower surface of the glass (l).

Description

  • This invention relates to heat strengthened glass and in particular to a method and apparatus for manufacturing heat strengthened glass panels for incorporation in a fully-glazed facade of a building.
  • It is desirable that such glass panels should be stronger than annealed glass so as to be capable of resisting stresses to which the panels may be subjected during glazing, and due to wind load when in situ. However the panels should not be heat treated to a degree such that thermally induced stresses in the glass are at a level which could cause dicing of the glass upon inadvertent fracture.
  • Glass sheets which satisfy this requirement as known as "heat strengthened glass" which is defined in United States Federal Specification DD-G-l403D, dated August l5, l972 as glass having a surface compression of not less than 3,500 p.s.i. (24 MN/m²) or greater than l0,000 p.s.i. (69 MN/m²) or an edge compression of less than 5,500 p.s.i. (38 MN/m²).
  • The permissible upper limit of stress is dependent on the thickness of the glass and it has been found that the thicker the glass the lower is the value of the stresses in the glass which may cause dicing when the glass is fractured. Thus thicker heat strengthened glass, for example about l2mm thick, may have compression stresses somewhat lower than those indicated above, while thinner heat strengthened glasses may have compression stresses somewhat higher than those indicated above.
  • It has been usual to produce heat strengthened glass sheets, for architectural use, on a roller furnace in which the glass is heated to a temperature above its strain point and is then cooled while it is horizontally supported. Usually this cooling is carried out by indexing the glass sheet to and fro on horizontal rollers while subjecting the glass surfaces to cooling flows, which are usually cooling air flows which are directed towards the upper and lower glass surfaces.
  • In order to allow flows of cooling air between the glass surface and the rollers, it has been usual to employ rollers which do not contact the lower surface of the glass along the whole length of the rollers.
  • Such rollers which have been employed are "donut" rollers having a spaced series of ceramic tyres which provide the roller support, or rollers which are wound helically with thermally insulating tape of refractory fibre material. Both the tyres and the helical windings provide bearing surfaces which are continuous across the region of contact between the roller and the glass.
  • When manufacturing heat strengthened thick glass, particularly in thickness of 6mm or more, for example about l0mm thick, the level of stress to be induced in the glass predicates a low rate of heat exchange with the glass surfaces during cooling. The thicker the glass, the lower the rate of cooling, and the heat transfer from the lower glass surface by conduction through the roller contact is then at a rate commensurate with heat transfer from the glass due to the overall cooling of exposed parts of the glass surface between the rollers. Thus the heat transfer between the glass and the supporting roller surfaces becomes significant and leads to patterns of iridescence in the glass. Patterns of iridescence induced in the glass, which are visible in polarised light, have been found to include prominent continuous band or trellis-like features which would be visible to the eye when the panels are glazed in a building. Such patterns are unacceptable, and are emphasised when the glass has been coated after its heat treatment, because the presence of a light reflecting coating on the glass can enhance the obtrusive nature of such iridescent patterns.
  • It is a main object of this invention to provide a solution to this problem which results in heat strengthened glass panels for architectural use in which any such patterns of iridescence are of a random or discontinuous nature, and are unobtrusive, being no worse than the kind of iridescent patterns which are usually observed in thermally toughened glass.
  • According to the invention there is provided a method of producing heat strengthened glass in which the glass is heated to a temperature above its strain point and is then cooled while horizontally supported, characterised by providing discontinuous support for the glass as it is cooled by intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass, whereby any pattern of iridescence resulting from heat transfer between the lower glass surface and the support is free of prominent continuous features.
  • In a preferred method the glass is supported on horizontal rollers having discontinuous bearing surfaces which provide said intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • Preferably the discontinuous bearing surfaces are of thermally insulating material.
  • The method of the invention may include applying a light reflecting coating to the glass before or after heat strengthening.
  • The invention also comprehends a glass treatment furnace for producing heat strengthened glass, having horizontal glass-supporting rollers and cooling-flow supply means in the vicinity of those rollers, characterised in that the bearing surface of each roller comprises discontinuous bearing elements which provide intermittent regional support contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • Preferably the discontinuous bearing elements have bearing surfaces of thermally insulating material.
  • The discontinuous bearing elements may be arranged spirally around the roller.
  • In another embodiment the discontinuous bearing elements may be arranged randomly on the roller.
  • In yet another embodiment the bearing elements are parts of castellated tyres. The castellated tyres may be angularly staggered around the roller.
  • Each bearing element may have a maximum linear dimension of 80mm.
  • Some embodiments of the invention are now described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:-
    • Figure l is a diagrammatic side elevation through the cooling station of a glass treatment furnace according to the invention,
    • Figure 2 is a view illustrating one form of glass supporting roller for use in the cooling station of Figure l,
    • Figure 3 is a similar view to Figure 2 of another roller form, and
    • Figure 4 illustrates diagrammatically two staggered ceramic tyres of the roller of Figure 3.
  • The cooling station of a glass treatment furnace for producing heat strengthened glass panels is illustrated diagrammatically in Figure l. A glass sheet l is heated to a temperature above its strain point, for example about 600°C while supported on horizontal rollers and then the hot glass sheet is transported on horizontal rollers to a cooling station shown in Figure l. At the cooling station the hot sheet l is supported on horizontal rollers 2 which are, for example, spaced about l20mm apart, and the glass is cooled by air flows 3 and 4 which are directed from upper and lower cooling-air supply hoods 5 and 6 mounted in the vicinity of the rollers 2. The air flows 3 and 4 may be directed towards the upper and lower surfaces of the glass sheet l by nozzles or through perforated plates which form a part of the supply means.
  • The hot glass sheet l is indexed to and fro in known manner through the air flows for a period of time, for example 4 minutes for l0mm glass, sufficient to induce the required stresses in the glass. After the glass has been cooled below its strain point it is cooled by higher pressure air flows for a further period for example 5 minutes, sufficient to reduce its temperature to handling temperature.
  • In order to avoid the production of an undesirable polarization pattern in the glass, the horizontal rollers 2 which support the glass while it is cooled are designed, according to the invention, to provide discontinuous support for the glass by intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass. To this end the bearing surface of each of the rollers 2 comprises discontinuous bearing elements which provide intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • One embodiment of each of the supporting rollers 2 is illustrated in Figure 2. The main body 7 of the roller is a conventional mild steel roller of cylindrical form, and discontinuous bearing elements 8 are adhered to the roller surface. The bearing elements 8 are arranged spirally around the roller 7, at spaced intervals along one or more spiral paths.
  • This supporting roller was produced by winding a glass fibre tape approximately 25mm wide spirally around the roller 7, using adhesive.
  • The spiral winding was then severed at periodic locations and severed portions removed so as to leave the discontinuous array of bearing elements 8 each approximately 25mm × 30mm and having a linear dimension of about 40mm. The maximum linear dimension of the bearing elements may be about 80mm. Preferably the bearing elements are less than 50mm long. The elements 8 provide intermittent regional support contact with the lower surface of the glass sheet. For a more durable support, a tape of refractory fibre sold under the trade mark "Kevlar" may be used in place of the glass fibre tape. The tape provides a discontinuous thermally insulating bearing surface on the roller.
  • This roller form ensures that conductive heat transfer away from every supported region of the lower glass surface, during the indexing of the glass sheet l on the rollers 2, occurs only over separated regions of the glass surface during cooling of that surface by the upward cooling air flows 4. The pattern of iridescence which could be observed in the heat strengthened glass panel was of a distributed appearance without prominent continuous features, for example lines, such as would induce the eye to observe the existence of that pattern. The appearance of the processed heat strengthened glass panel was acceptable even when the glass sheet had been coated with a light reflecting coating, for example of sputtered metal. The light reflecting coating could be applied to the glass before heat strengthening if the coating was sufficiently durable to withstand the heat strengthening process, or after heat strengthening.
  • A glass sheet l0mm thick and l200mm square was processed by this method using flows of cooling air at a pressure of about 2.5Pa (.0l inch water gauge) for 4 minutes. The sheet was then subjected to higher pressure cooling for about 5 minutes. The resulting heat strengthened glass sheets had an edge compression greater than 40 MPa and a centre tension in the range 20 MPa to 25 MPa. This sheet did not dice on fracture, and if fractured in situ in a building would break into pieces sufficiently large to be retained by a glazing frame in which it was clamped. The increased strength of the glass sheet provided effective resistance to wind loading.
  • Thinner sheets of heat processed glass have somewhat higher stresses. For example, samples of 6mm glass produced by the method of the invention had a surface edge compression of about 55 MPa and a centre tension of 25 MPa to 30 MPa. Sample glass sheets 4 mm thick had a surface/edge compression of about 55 MPa and a centre tension of about 25 MPa, although dicing fracture does not occur until the centre tension is about 43 MPa.
  • The discontinuous bearing elements 8 of Figure 2 may be arranged in a random distribution on the roller 7 in a manner which does not detract from effective support contact for indexing the glass sheet, between the cooling air flows 3 and 4.
  • Another effective form of each roller 2 is with a moulded ceramic sleeve having a moulded distribution of raised bearing elements which intermittently contact the lower surface of the glass sheet as it is indexed to and fro.
  • A further roller construction is illustrated in Figure 3, which is an adaptation according to the invention of a convention "donut" roller having a central spindle 9 and a spaced series of wheels l0 with tyres ll of reinforced ceramic fibre in a matrix.
  • Each tyre has a castellated bearing surface, providing three bearing elements l2, each providing a bearing land about 25mm long, on each tyre, separated by machined depressions l3. The bearing lands l2 need not be equiangularly spaced around the tyres, and the castellated tyres ll are angularly staggered in random manner around the spindle 9, as indicated in Figure 4, so that the bearing lands l2 of all the tyres ll of the roller together provide random, discontinuous support for the glass sheet with intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
  • Each of these horizontal roller constructions according to the invention provides bearing surfaces which are not continuous in any direction over the region of contact between the glass surface and the roller. This ensures that overall uniform heat transfer from the lower surface of the glass is disturbed only over discrete separated regions, thereby producing as a new product heat strengthened glass panels having a visually unobtrusive pattern of iridescence which is acceptable in heat strengthened glass panels for glazing in a facade of a building.

Claims (11)

1. A method of producing heat strengthened glass in which the glass is heated to a temperature above its strain point and is then cooled while horizontally supported, characterised by providing discontinuous support for the glass as it is cooled by intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass, whereby any pattern of iridescence resulting from heat transfer between the lower glass surface and the support is free of prominent continuous features.
2. A method as claimed in Claim l, in which the glass is supported on horizontal rollers having discontinuous bearing surfaces which provide said intermittent regional contact with the lower surface of the glass.
3. A method as claimed in Claim 2, wherein the discontinuous bearing surfaces are of thermally insulating material.
4. A method as claimed in any one of Claims l to 3, including applying a light reflecting coating to the glass before or after heat strengthening.
5. A glass treatment furnace for producing heat strengthened glass, having horizontal glass-supporting rollers and cooling-flow supply means in the vicinity of those rollers, characterised in that the bearing surface of each roller comprises discontinuous bearing elements which provide intermittent regional support contact with the lower surface of the glass.
6. A furnace as claimed in Claim 5, wherein the discontinuous bearing elements have bearing surfaces of thermally insulating material.
7. A furnace as claimed in Claim 5 or Claim 6, wherein the discontinuous bearing elements are arranged spirally around the roller.
8. A furnace as claimed in Claim 5 or Claim 6, wherein the discontinuous bearing elements are arranged randomly on the roller.
9. A furnace as claimed in Claim 5 or Claim 6, wherein the bearing elements are parts of castellated tyres.
l0. A furnace as claimed in Claim 9 wherein the castellated tyres are angularly staggered around the roller.
11. A furnace as claimed in any one of Claims 5 to l0, wherein each bearing element has a maximum linear dimension of 80mm.
EP87305572A 1986-06-26 1987-06-23 Heat strengthened glass Expired - Lifetime EP0253525B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AT87305572T ATE52485T1 (en) 1986-06-26 1987-06-23 HEAT TEMPERED GLASS.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8615678 1986-06-26
GB08615678A GB2191998A (en) 1986-06-26 1986-06-26 Heat strengthened glass

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0253525A1 true EP0253525A1 (en) 1988-01-20
EP0253525B1 EP0253525B1 (en) 1990-05-09

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP87305572A Expired - Lifetime EP0253525B1 (en) 1986-06-26 1987-06-23 Heat strengthened glass

Country Status (10)

Country Link
US (1) US4759788A (en)
EP (1) EP0253525B1 (en)
JP (1) JPS638230A (en)
AT (1) ATE52485T1 (en)
AU (1) AU596925B2 (en)
CA (1) CA1310834C (en)
DE (1) DE3762608D1 (en)
GB (1) GB2191998A (en)
NZ (1) NZ220787A (en)
ZA (1) ZA874557B (en)

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EP2159199A3 (en) * 2008-09-02 2015-05-20 Arcon-dur Sicherheitsglas GmbH & Co. KG Method and device for producing thermally pre-tensioned glass panes and thermally pre-tensioned glass pane
WO2019186052A1 (en) 2018-03-27 2019-10-03 Saint-Gobain Glass France Thermally hardened isotropic glass

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AU602234B2 (en) * 1987-07-10 1990-10-04 Libbey-Owens-Ford Co. Conveyor roll construction
DE4019335C2 (en) * 1990-06-18 1993-11-25 Deere & Co Bale press for forming cylindrical bales from a crop
FI86055C (en) * 1990-07-04 1992-07-10 Tamglass Oy Device for thermosetting of glass sheets
FI86406C (en) * 1991-01-11 1992-08-25 Tamglass Oy Device for thermosetting of glass sheets
US6619471B1 (en) * 2000-10-25 2003-09-16 Surface Engineering Associates, Inc. Furnace roller
US6647914B1 (en) 2001-12-18 2003-11-18 Engineered Glass Products, Llc Free-standing marine windshield assembly having a polymeric frame
ES2362696T3 (en) * 2008-02-26 2011-07-11 Rioglass Solar, S.A. REFLECTOR ELEMENT FOR A SOLAR HEAT REFLECTOR AND METHOD TO PRODUCE THE SAME.
CN104986949B (en) * 2015-07-10 2017-07-28 中航三鑫股份有限公司 15mm semi-tempered glass preparation methods
JP2019507092A (en) * 2016-01-31 2019-03-14 コーニング インコーポレイテッド Thermally tempered glass sheet with microscale refractive index or birefringence pattern

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DE2546452A1 (en) * 1975-03-07 1976-09-16 Siemens Ag TRANSPORT DEVICE FOR GLASS PANELS HEATED TO A SOFTENING TEMPERATURE
US3996035A (en) * 1975-10-01 1976-12-07 Ppg Industries, Inc. Coating and heat strengthening glass sheets
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EP2159199A3 (en) * 2008-09-02 2015-05-20 Arcon-dur Sicherheitsglas GmbH & Co. KG Method and device for producing thermally pre-tensioned glass panes and thermally pre-tensioned glass pane
WO2019186052A1 (en) 2018-03-27 2019-10-03 Saint-Gobain Glass France Thermally hardened isotropic glass

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS638230A (en) 1988-01-14
AU596925B2 (en) 1990-05-17
ATE52485T1 (en) 1990-05-15
ZA874557B (en) 1988-04-27
NZ220787A (en) 1988-10-28
GB8615678D0 (en) 1986-07-30
EP0253525B1 (en) 1990-05-09
US4759788A (en) 1988-07-26
CA1310834C (en) 1992-12-01
DE3762608D1 (en) 1990-06-13
GB2191998A (en) 1987-12-31
AU7478887A (en) 1988-01-07

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